Note: Descriptions are shown in the official language in which they were submitted.
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Field of the ;In~e~'~ion:
~ his invention reIates to containers and in
particular to containers having a metal container body,
such as cans in which food stuffs and other products
are commonly packaged.
Background of *he Inve~*ion
In many cases it is desirable for containers
to be easily recloseable. The most desirable type of
reclosure, so far as the user is concerned, is one which
can be placed over the access aperture of the container
and turned to effect reclosure, for example a screw
cap of which many kinds are available. However, it
has been necessary, in order to satisfactorily apply
a screw-type reclosure to a metal container body, to
form some kind of screw thread around the upper part of
the container body wall. In production, this is a
relatively slow process and adds significantly to the
cost of the container. Also, if it is desired to have a
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printed or other decorative finish extending right to
the top of the container, the screw threading operation
has to be carried out in an area where the finish has
already been applied and consequently the finish is
readily damaged.
Further, many products including food stuffs
require to be packed in metal containers which are
hermetically sealed yet easy to open. This has been
done in recent years using the well-known ring-pull
closures, a ring of which is pulled in order to tear
away a part of the hermetically sealed lid of the container.
This type of closure is destroyed on opening and therefore
requires an additional re-closure after the lid has been
broken open.
Summar~ of the Invention
The present invention provides a container comprising
a metal container body having an access aperture with a
curled rim and a cap for closing the access aperture,
the cap being formed with a plurality of projections
projecting radially inwardly and the outside of the
curled rim of the container body having recesses therein,
wherein portions of the curled rim are radially flattened
so as to provide said recesses and to leave, adjacent
said recesses, rim portions under which the projections
on the cap can engage, the recesses being arranged to
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permit passage of the cap projections therethrough upon
bringing the cap axially up to the access aperture, and
the cap projections being arranged to engage under said
rim portions adjacent the recesses when the cap is
then turned, so as to secure the cap on the container
body.
The invention thereby provides a particularly
economical form of screw closure, because it avoids the
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necessity for the relatively expensive operation of
threading the wall of the container body and also enables
the use of a can which has a very short skirt and
therefor requires less material than the relatively
long-skirted caps usually employed as a screw closure.
Also, because the invention involves formations
only on the curled rim of the container and not on its
wall, the possibility of damaging a finish applied to
the can wall is substantially avoided.
In addition, the invention can be applied to the
type of can body disclosed in our pending Canadian
Patent Application Serial No. 312,815 filed October 6, 1978,
this combination providing not only a hermetic seal and easy
opening facilities, but also easy and effective reclosure of
the container after the hermetic seal has been broken.
The invention also enables the provision of a
shallow flush fitting lid on a metal container body.
The lid depth maylbe greater than that shown in the
embodiments to be described, as desired, with the depth
of the necked body portion correspondingly increased.
Brief Description of the Drawings
In order that the invention may be more clearly
understood, two embodiments thereof will now be described,
by way of example, with reference to the accompanying
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dlagrammatic drawings, in which: .
Figure 1 shbws a top plan view of a container
according to the inventlon;
Figure 2'shows' a side elevation of the upper
part of the container of Figure l;
Figure 3 shows a cap for the container of Figures
1 and 2;
Figures 4 and 5 show local cross-sections on
lines IV-IV and V-V, res'pectlvely, of Figure l;
10' Flgure'6 shows a top plan view of a different
form of container in.accordance with the invention; and
Figure'7 is a side elevation of the container of
Figure 6.
Detailed D'es'cr'i~t'i'on ~f ~bodi~ents
15Referring to Figures 1 to 3, a container comprises
a container body 2'which is necked.at 4 just below a
curled rim 6, wh1ch extends around the access aperture of
the.container. The container body can be of any
construction capable of having a curled rim, for example
it may be a built-up ~ody having a side seam 7 which is
a lap welded seam! or a lock seam, or a "mash" welded
'side seam, the latter.form of construction as disclosed
in the above mentioned application being preferred; the
contalner body may alternatively be a drawn metal body.
If the body is a built-up type, then it may, if desired,
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be ~made from double reduced (.DR) tin plate however
other tin plates or aluminium sheet may be used.
The curled rlm 6 ls flattened in the radial
direction at four positions equally spaced round its
periphery.. The flattened portions are indicated at 8
and result in recesses 10 lying between the flattened
portions.
A cap 12 is shown in. Flgure 3.'. The cap may be
of drawn metal or of plastics material. It is illustrated
10 as belng of drawn metal and having a top 14 and a sklrt
16,' the skirt being formed with four equally spaced
radially inwardly projecting projections 18 formed by
indenting the metal from the outside. The projections
18 are slightly angled as shown and are slightly shorter
in length than are'the recesses 8 so that as the cap 12
is placed on the container body 2 the projections 18
can pass axially through the recesses 10. By then turning
the cap 12 clockwise relative to the contalner body
the projections 18 engage under the rim portions 20
20. located immediatçly clockwise .adjacent the recesses 10
and the slight angling of the 'projections 18 causes
slight further turning to draw,the cap 12'down tightly
- over the container aperture~
. Figure '4 shows'how a projectlon'18 can pass
down through recess lO'formed by the flattened curled
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rim portion 8 and Figure 5 shows how the projection
18 comes into contact with the adjacent rounded por lon
20 of the curled rim when the cap'12 is turned.
Figures 4 and 5 also show how the container body
2 may be sealed by means of a diaphragm 22 bonded
around the'top of the curled rim 6. These Figures also
show a wad 24 of packing material which may be employed
to ensure'that th~'diaphragm edge is held firmly in
contact with'the 'rlm whIle 'the bond is setting after
the cap 12 has been applied~ If the diaphragm 2Z is
intended to achieve a hermetic seal, then preferably
the container body 2 will either be drawn and consequently
seamless, or will be a seamed body constructed as
described in the 'application referred to above. It will
be appreciated that the top of curled rim 6 is narrower
at the flattened portions 8 than elsewhere so that the
bonding area,jis reduced. To assist in achieving a good
bond in these narrow regions, the centre of the'cap 12
may be slightly indented as shown in Figures 4 and 5 so
that it causes the diaphragm 22'to be pressed slightly
into the mouth of the container body 2 and consequently
"wraps" the margin of the diaphragm slightly around the
inner surface'of the curlea rim, rather than pressing
it simply against the top of the curled rim.
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It is to be noted that the cap 12 has a d~ameter
s~)stantlally equal to the maximum diameter of the can
bocly 2 so that once 'it is fitted the cap skirt 16 is
flush with'the main side wall of the can, thus giving
a pleasant appearance and heIping to avoid damaging
of the cap skirt during handling.
In Figures'6 and 7 parts equivalent to parts
in the preceding Figures are given the same reference
numerals. In the embodiments shown in Figures 6 and 7
the recesses 10 outside the curled rim 6 are-formed in
a different mànner. Instead of the curled rim being
flattened radially to make recesses where it is flattened,
it is flattened axially at four equally spaced posltions,
the flattened portions 26 thereby spreading radially
outwardly, similar to portions of a flange. Consequently,
the recesses 10 lie between the flattened rim portions
instead of in register with them and it is radially
projecting rim portions 26, under which the inward
.
projections'18 on the'lid are able to engage so as to
permit the cap 12 to be secured on the container body
2 by putting the cap on the'container body, the cap
projections 18 passing down through'the recesses 10, and
then turning the cap so that projections'18 engage under
the adjacent parts o~ flattened portions 26. Instead of
the'projections'18 on the'cap'12 being slightly angled;
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the outer edges of the flattened rim portions 26 may
be ~sllghtly angled by twistlng them while flattening
them.
It can ~e seen that the formation shown ln
Figures 6 and 7 does not lnvolve narrowing the top of
the curled rim 6, so that the bonding area is not reduced
as it was in the prevlous embodiment.
It had hitherto been somewhat difflcult to
reliably provide an external thread on a body of a
container made from double-reduced (DR) tln plate because
that material is brittle and partlcularly inclined to
fracture when stretched, and the provision of a thread
lnvolved stretching the metal and consequently the
possibility of fracturing it. It can therefore be
lS appreciated that the present lnvention, apart from its
other advantages, enables provision of a screw-type
closure on a DR plate container without the likellhood
of damaglng the container body while forming a thread
on lt.
Whllst the invention has been described in terms
of a container having four flattened portions and a cap
having four projections, it will be understood that the
value of havlng a plurality of 5uCh engaglng means resides
in the ,even clamping of cap to bod~ around the rim.
Therefore any number of engagements may~be used, moxe than
four if desired, or possibly less than four if the application
will permit.
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